Become a Member
Life

‘I survived Chernobyl, now I’m searching for a cure for Covid-19’

Yan Leyfman was born near enough to Chernobyl to suffer terrible illness as a child, but after he was cured by Israeli doctors, he's dedicated his life to medical research

July 2, 2020 16:51
Chernobyl  GettyImages-110964326

ByKate Samuelson , Kate Samuelson

3 min read

Three years before and roughly 
90 miles away from where Yan Leyfman was born, a flawed nuclear reactor exploded at a Ukrainian power plant. The incident has come to be known globally as Chernobyl and is largely regarded as the worst nuclear disaster in history.

When Leyfman was born in 1989 in Bobruisk, eastern Belarus, the city was still reeling from the effects of the catastrophe, which coated the area in radioactive dust. He was an early developer, learning to walk and talk at the age of one, but around the time he turned two his prospects became bleak. “I started feeling extremely weak and I couldn’t hold food down,” he tells me. “My face and body were covered with cysts, but I wasn’t alone; people were dying left and right from this mysterious illness which was taking lives with no explanation.”

His parents took him to clinics and hospitals across the country, where he was diagnosed with everything from herpes to syphilis to HIV. Eventually, he was taken to a prestigious hospital in the former Soviet Union. “They had experts come and look at me like I was an ancient relic,” he says, “but no one could diagnose me. I was just dying slowly, day by day by day.”